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Posts Tagged ‘Sigma’

First impressions shooting with the Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM

10 Jun

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We’ve just published our first impressions of shooting with the Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 EX DC lens. We’ve tried to express just why we’re so excited about this lens, which offers APS-C DSLR users access to some of the depth-of-field and low-light capabilities that full-frame shooters get from their F2.8 zooms. We’re hoping to hear about pricing and availability soon so, in the meantime and in the light of our first impressions, what would you expect to pay for this lens?

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just posted: Our Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM preview samples gallery

05 Jun

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We’ve been lucky enough to get our hands on an early pre-production sample of one of the most anticipated lenses of the year, the Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM, and bring you a gallery of full-resolution sample images shot with it. This lens is the fastest zoom ever made for SLRs and, in principle, should provide the depth-of-field control and low-light image quality on an APS-C DSLR that you’d get using an F2.8 zoom on 35mm full-frame. We’ve shot a samples gallery including a variety of subjects, using a range of apertures, focal lengths and subject distances, to try to give an initial flavor of how the lens performs.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma announces availability of 35mm F1.4 DG HSM for Sony and Pentax

24 May

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In a brief note on its Japanese website, Sigma has announced that the Sony and Pentax mount versions of its highly-regarded 35mm F1.4 DG HSM ‘Art’ lens will go on sale on 31st May. It’s also announced that the Nikon-mount version of its 120-300mm F2.8 DG OS HSM ‘Sports’ telephoto zoom will be available at the same time. We gave the 35mm F1.4 our Gold Award when we reviewed it back in December, for its combination of exceptionally good optics and solid build at a price rather lower than the camera manufacturers’ equivalents.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sony RX1 wins Camera Grand Prix 2013, Sigma 35mm F1.4 lens of the year

16 May

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Sony’s RX1 fixed 35mm full frame compact has received the prestigious Camera Grand Prix 2013 title, while Sigma’s 35mm F1.4 DG HSM was named lens of the year. The awards, organized by the Japanese Camera Journal Press Club have a history of recognizing what prove to be historically significant cameras. Meanwhile, the Editors Awards were given to the Canon EOS 6D and Sigma’s DP Merrill series of compacts.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma USA gives details of 60mm F2.8 DN Art for mirrorless cameras

02 May

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Sigma USA has given the price and introduction date of the 60mm F2.8 DN Art lens for mirrorless systems, originally announced at CP+. The 60mm DN will be available in the US for both Micro Four Thirds and Sony E-mount from mid-May at a cost of around $ 239. It will offer a 90mm equivalent field-of-view when mounted on Sony NEX bodies or 120mm equivalent on Micro Four Thirds cameras. This third lens for mirrorless cameras from Sigma (joining the affordable 19mm F2.8 DN Art and 30mm F2.8 DN Art), will also be available in a choice of black or silver finishes.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Korean site publishes sample images from Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM

23 Apr

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Korean website lcap.tistory.com has published what it claims are sample images from the new Sigma 18-35mm f/1.8 DC HSM lens, purporting to show its performance in a range of different shooting situations, on both a Canon EOS 600D and 5D Mark III. We doubt very much that the site had Sigma’s permission to publish the images from what is almost certain to be a pre-production lens, but if you’re curious, you can click through for a link to the original ‘preview’ at lcap.tistory.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just Posted: Hands-on with the Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM

22 Apr

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Just posted: Our hands-on preview of the Sigma 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM Art lens. The announcement of the world’s first constant F1.8 zoom caused a lot of discussion, much of it centered around the idea that the brighter aperture would help APS-C DSLRs to compete toe-to-toe with full frame cameras in many respects. We’ve had a chance to handle the lens and prepare a preview putting its capabilities in more context. Click here to find out more.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma DP3 Merrill Review

19 Apr

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Some see the arrival of cameras such as these as indicative of camera companies responding to the market by taking on smart phones as a camera to take everywhere.

While phone cameras are damned useful and most of them take pretty decent images, they fall down in many respects.

Some, but not all, fall down in low light, with little access to high IOS settings; many disallow precise control of the lens aperture, enabling low light photography and/or control of depth of field; a similar story can be told of shutter speed control, preventing sharp images of fast moving objects; extended zooms are rare in smart phone cameras; battery life may be foreshortened due to excessive phone use.

But we’re not here to bash smart phones … god love ‘em!

Back to the review.

As usual, I started firing off with not a peek in the manual. OK for a few shots, then the screen blacked out!

Messing about with the buttons I found I had encountered one that accidentally canned the display. Dumb!

The DP3 Merrill looks like a bread-and-butter digicam in its all black livery with very few external controls, each id’d by clear white text. And little else.

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Controls

Top deck: flash hot shoe, button for mode selection and shutter plus a command dial that allows alteration to diaphragm, shutter speed and menu.

Rear: a button for AEL (exposure lock), doubling for trash; a QuickSet button that accesses commonly used functions like ISO, flash mode, metering and drive modes; the menu button which takes you into the not over-loaded menu options; the four way controller selects picture settings (contrast, sharpness, saturation) and focus pattern; replay; display on/off and other options.

If you want to select Program or shutter or aperture priority you tap the mode button. Simple!

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Sigma DP3 Merrill Features

The big headline with this camera is its Foveon X3 sensor that captures 46 million pixel still images. See below for an explanation.

The maximum image size is 4704×3136 pixels or 40x27cm as a printed image.

Video: A tiny 640×480 MPEG movie clip at 30fps. This camera is surely not for making movies.

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The fast f2.8/500 lens has a 35 SLR equivalent of 75mm, so it’s an ideal beast for shooting portraits, not general scenery. Macro? Ideal!

A large buffer memory enables the camera to capture up to seven RAW images per sequence in continuous shooting mode.

Auto focus has a multi point select mode that selects the desired focusing point from nine different frames and a free move mode that can move the desired point to any spot. Manual focus is also available by using the focus ring for focusing — just like an SLR!

Startup Time

It was three seconds after power was applied that I could take the first shot; follow-ons came in at a little over a second apart. Not fast!

Distortion

No problems.

Sigma DP3 Merrill ISO Tests

Now here is where the walls fall down!

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My tests ran from ISO 100 to ISO 6400. On running the images on screen it was apparent that images in the range ISO 100 to 800 had no problems but when ISO 1600 was reached, a blue cast appeared.

Worse still, the ISO 3200 shot displayed even more problems, which became more severe at ISO 6400: these were noise, desaturation of the image and the appearance of horizontal ‘tracking lines.’

The camera’s selling agent was asked about this oddity and replied: ‘I have attached a few photos taken with the DP2 Merrill. You will note a similar pattern appearing on the photos as the ISO increases. This is seemingly a limitation of the Foveon sensor.

‘The most effective range of the camera that we have been able to ascertain is between 100 and 800.

‘I hope this sheds some light on the situation.’

‘The latest version of Sigma’s Photo Pro 5.5.1 software can correct some of the colour noise and further processing can help too.” Download at http://www.sigma-sd.com/download/photopro.html

‘When using the Sigma Photo Pro software you will notice that the initial image (in the RAW .X3F format) gets a lot crisper and the colour will correct to some extent when the software has rendered the image.

‘Further processing with Lightroom/Photoshop etc can reduce some of the noise.

‘But again, the camera’s effective ISO range is generally between 100-800 and this works across the current range [of cameras] and a lot of the older range of Foveon sensors.

‘One other thing about this camera is that you will get the best performance when shooting RAW images.’

I did not take the opportunity of using the software fix; it seemed to me that the high ISO problem is something that should have been attended to in the original camera design.

I have searched the Internet and found there is some limited comment about the problem.

Not a good look!

Sigma DP3 Merrill Review Verdict

Quality: I found the colour depth to be quite outstanding; sharpness was also excellent.

Why you’d buy the Sigma DP3 Merrill: compact, good quality lens, big sensor.

Why you wouldn’t: fixed, longish focal length too restricting; slow and hesitant AF.

Without doubt, a high level camera but the ISO problem is a serious deterrent for me.

Sigma DP3 Merrill Specifications

Image Sensor: 46 million effective pixels.
Sensor: 23.5×15.7mm Foveon X3 CMOS.
Lens: f2.8/24.2mm (75mm as 35 SLR equivalent).
Metering: Evaluative, centre-weighted, spot.
Exposure Modes: Auto, Program AE, shutter and aperture priority, manual.
Shutter Speed: 30 to 1/2000 second.
Memory: SD/SDHC/SDXC/MMC.
Image Sizes (pixels): Stills: 4704×3136 to 2336×1568.
Movies: 640×480.
Viewfinder: 6.35cm LCD screen (920,000).
File Formats: RAW, JPEG, RAW+JPEG, MPEG4.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 100 to 6400.
Continuous Shooting: 3 fps (4 JPEGs or 3 RAW).
Interface: USB 2.0, AV, audio out, DC input.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery, DC.
Dimensions: 121.5×66.7×80.6 WHDmm.
Weight: 400 (body only).
Price: Get a price on the Sigma D3 Merrill Digital Camera at Amazon.

INFO

Foveon X sensor. How it differs:
To capture the color that other image sensors miss, Foveon X3® direct image sensors use three layers of pixels embedded in silicon. The layers are positioned to take advantage of the fact that silicon absorbs different wavelengths of light to different depths. The bottom layer records red, the middle layer records green, and the top layer records blue. Each stack of pixels directly records all of the light at each point in the image.
More info at www.foveon.com

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Sigma DP3 Merrill Review


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Sigma announces super-fast 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM Art for APS-C DSLRs

18 Apr

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Sigma has announced the 18-35mm F1.8 DC HSM Art lens for APS-C DSLRs – the world’s first constant F1.8 zoom. The lens covers a 27-52.5mm equivalent range, though the company has not yet announced which mounts it will be offered in. There is also no announcement of a recommended price. The lens will offer the light-gathering and depth-of-field equivalent of a constant F2.7 on full-frame, which may under-cut the need for some photographers to change formats.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma UK to start shipping USB dock and 120-300mm F2.8 from May 2013

13 Apr

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Sigma UK has announced its new USB dock for lenses will be available from May 2013 at a retail price of £39.99 (including VAT). The company has also announced the 120-300mm F2.8 DG OS HSM lens will start shipping in Canon and Sigma mounts around the same time but has not confirmed the price. Launched at Photokina 2012, the USB dock enables users to easily update lens firmware and fine-tune focus parameters, while the 120-300mm F2.8 lens comes with a button to adjust the focus speed and the focus limiter.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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